The first thing landscape designer Laura Cooper asked Devis and Purdy was to recall childhood gardens and outdoor play. In that spirit, she designed their backyard, integrating the high ground with the low just outside the “kids’ wing.” The resulting series of outdoor rooms on this quarter-acre is full of memory and play.

When experimental filmmaker Laura Purdy describes the transformation of her house in Los Angeles’s Los Feliz neighborhood, she speaks glowingly of a “perfect storm” among the women who collaborated on the renovation. For about a year, architect Linda Taalman, landscape designer Laura Cooper, and Purdy met for creative sessions, exchanging ideas as they converged on a detail or spatial sequence. “In a field so often dominated by men, it was unusual to find myself in these intensely fruitful all-female meetings,” recalls Taalman. As the women met—getting critical input from Purdy’s husband Juan Devis and Taalman’s husband and former codirector at Taalman Koch Architecture (TKA), Alan Koch—their children often played together in the background.

And like those great conversations, the resulting design acquired its own flow, full of colorful narrative, spirited counterpoint, and anecdote. Now, in place of dark, disconnected spaces, outdoor rooms echo luminous indoor ones, and Purdy and her family’s eclectic collections of art and personal artifacts share space with flashes of pattern and interior planes of saffron and pink stucco.

Vibrant as that infusion of color appears, the renovation strikes a gentle balance. Taalman extracted the latent design intent of this quiet, mid-century-modern house while imbuing it with the warm character and spirited life stories of Purdy, Devis, a Colombian-born filmmaker and public-television producer, and their two young children. Their 2,000-square-foot home was the 1952 work of 23-year-old Les Guthrie (who later developed Redondo Beach’s King Harbor Marina). Tucked behind a carport on a cul-de-sac, the white-stuccoed building steps down a slope, largely hidden from the street.

The couple fell for the house in 2003, when the original owners’ children put it up for sale. Though it was run-down, the design won them over. But their offer was not the highest bid. “So we sent the sellers a letter about our new baby, Eva Luna, and how we wanted to do the same thing their parents did: raise a family here,” Devis recalls. “I guess it convinced them.”

Once in their new home, they made few changes, pulling up carpet to reveal existing parquet floors and sandblasting green paint from interior paneling to expose redwood. The main living level provided three side-by-side bedrooms—fully occupied following Simon’s birth, in 2006—and the lower floor a home office and playroom. But, by 2009, they were outgrowing the arrangement and, much as they loved the place, wearying of its dark interiors.

Among the architects approached for remodeling, only TKA proposed adding no additional square footage. “The house had good bones,” Taalman says. “We could solve the shortcomings within the existing envelope by creating a master suite, a grown-up retreat upstairs, and a kids’ zone with bedrooms and a playroom below.” The clients leapt for it.

Good as the bones were, Taalman remembers, many rooms and connections seemed spatially “trapped or dead-ended.” A laundry room came between the kitchen and backyard. The lower floor lacked flow to the outdoors. And the yard’s two levels—paved in concrete and separated by a steep slope—barely communicated with each other. TKA soon enlisted Cooper, an unconventional, self-taught landscape designer who trained as an artist and teaches at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena.

The process ultimately involved stripping the building to its studs to modify openings and achieve an even finish. Now, from the street, the house appears virtually unchanged—but just over the threshold, an animated dialogue begins. A new floor-to-ceiling window, facing an existing one, transforms the entry hall into a luminous, glass-walled connector, introducing glimpses of color and a visual link between indoor and outdoor spaces. Cork—replacing an eye-stalling patchwork of parquet—gives the entire floor continuity and a soft bounce underfoot, and even runs down steps and up some of the kids’ walls, morphing into a pinboard. Its flecked rhythm echoes the back patio’s round eucalyptus “pavers,” salvaged from a moribund tree. “For every indoor space, I wanted to create an outdoor counterpart,” says Cooper. Through big living-area windows, a black-and-cream-tiled wading pool appears, reading almost like a patterned rug just outside the glass.

Nearby, jungly plantings evoke the tropical warmth of Devis’s native Latin America and the era in which the house was built— as do the living room’s raked-stucco walls in pink and yellow, inspired by architect Luis Barragán’s Mexican modernism. These vivid, rustic planes—some extending from inside to out—contribute to the living area’s newfound architectural clarity (inherent but partially trapped in Guthrie’s design). Freed from compartmentalizing partitions, a fluid living-dining-kitchen area now rises to the existing pitched ceiling. Taalman created a glass doorway between the kitchen and patio that seems as if it’s always been there. Downstairs, a big glass panel, hung from a barn-door track, opens the playroom to the outdoors. Here, as in the master bedroom, a single wall of artfully patterned wallpaper animates the space—lightly echoing the living room’s energizing stucco. And a bit of improvisation during construction yielded such playful touches as a large porthole between the kids’ zone and a stairway with a rope handrail.

Though Taalman and Purdy ardently sought out just the right materials and finishes, the results are remarkably laid-back, with children scampering about and artwork, ranging from playful to provocative, displayed in thoughtful yet unfussy ways.

“The process influenced us all, and turned us into friends for life,” says Cooper. “I got so obsessed with that magical yellow wall, I borrowed it for a whole room in my house.” The unusually collaborative and “contemplative” process, says the architect, allowed time to consider “how everyday life happens, how children and families would use the space—and to fine-tune forms and materials.” As for the countless experiments to find the precise shade of pink, she adds: “I’m not sure a lot of men would have had patience for that.”

But for all the womanly energy, it’s unclear if this project embodies a “female sensibility.” Soft, free curves—in the eucalyptus rounds, lush plantings, playroom wallpaper, or an animal hide rug—play against the house’s straight-edged modernism. But what’s feminine and what’s simply expressive? “In Latin America, we’re not afraid of color,” says Devis. “Pink occurs in nature. It’s everywhere in the tropics. For us, it isn’t considered ‘girlie’—I love this pink.”

Just as the stucco reveals the raked process of its creation, the Devis-Purdy House and landscape conveys, most of all, the quality of collaboration that went into their making—and, in the end, the family that brings it all to life.

A good dose of Barragán—turned a dark and beleaguered mid-century house into a family home for the ages. The paint colors chosen by the residents and architect Linda Taalman are American Cheese 2019-40 and Blushing Bride 2086-50, both by Benjamin Moore.

The master bedroom features a Case Study bed from Modernica.

The cork stairs with a rope railing lead down to the kids’ level.

Simon and Eva Luna play in front of a wall covered in Daks wallpaper from Walnut.

Some 35 percent of the materials from the renovation were resurrected in the yard: Redwood panels became fencing. Blocks cut from original concrete patios form the snake wall. And Purdy plans to crochet colorful cozies over various branches and stumps.

While reporting on Hadley and Peter Arnold's Canyon House, writer and architect Sarah Amelar got to rub shoulders–or rather wings and fins–with the family's menagerie: three dogs, a cat, two rabbits, two birds and a fish. Amerlar also attended the world premiere of The Mystery of the Two Sisters, an original play staged in the courtyard by Arnolds' daughter and her friends.